I'm with you Boo I just hope I'm not to stiff to fit out the door. The revamped line up is confusing to me at least. It seem like the 400 series is closer to what we have at least after the tire upgrade and air bags. It also seems that a lot of features were dropped. We looked at a new Berkshire but the curved wall around the bath turned us off a bit. I like the layout ok but nothing that I would trade mine for. When we had Brad and Hall redo our furniture and new captain seats it is so comfortable and is our own design.

Well it is a pain in the butt. There is a number of ways you can do this. (Option 1) We watch sat TV most of the time so for Mid TV the HDMI come from the Sat rec to the mid TV. Now for the rear (bedroom) the installers ran the Cable (RG6) from the Sat unit on the roof to the edge of the roof above the rear TV and in to the cable duct and out of the wall in back of the TV in to the Sat rec and HDMI out to the TV. The oust side TV is another thing for the time being, was able to get at the back of the TV under the table so when we are parked I just run a 12 ft. cable around the couch and plug it in the back of the TV and the other end in to the standard switch box that connection is (SD). I have been told by my local dealer people have stopped by the factory in Elkhart and the will snake the HDMI Cable thru the harness for no charge. I guess they will do this because there was no cable run from the switch box to the outside TV. Now (Option) is to do the HDMI converter thing and use the existing cable in the coach (RG6) also replace the standard analog switch box out and use a HDMI switch box. That will still leave you with the cable running to the outside TV. I ran the comp 3 connector cable but if you run RG6 and us a HDMI converter. The wife and I have different venues of what we want to watch when we watch TV or watch DVD’s we have two DVD’s one in the bedroom and one at the mid TV and the one at the outside TV. For the sat Rec’s we use RF remotes so we can control the outside TV from the Mid TV sat rec.Sorry for the long reply but this is the easiest way I have found to do it there are many ways and you kind of wind up with a kluge and you wind up pissing your next door buddy off when you change your channels and his change also.

Well it is a pain in the butt. There is a number of ways you can do this. (Option 1) We watch sat TV most of the time so for Mid TV the HDMI come from the Sat rec to the mid TV. Now for the rear (bedroom) the installers ran the Cable (RG6) from the Sat unit on the roof to the edge of the roof above the rear TV and in to the cable duct and out of the wall in back of the TV in to the Sat rec and HDMI out to the TV. The oust side TV is another thing for the time being, was able to get at the back of the TV under the table so when we are parked I just run a 12 ft. cable around the couch and plug it in the back of the TV and the other end in to the standard switch box that connection is (SD). I have been told by my local dealer people have stopped by the factory in Elkhart and the will snake the HDMI Cable thru the harness for no charge. I guess they will do this because there was no cable run from the switch box to the outside TV. Now (Option) is to do the HDMI converter thing and use the existing cable in the coach (RG6) also replace the standard analog switch box out and use a HDMI switch box. That will still leave you with the cable running to the outside TV. I ran the comp 3 connector cable but if you run RG6 and us a HDMI converter. The wife and I have different venues of what we want to watch when we watch TV or watch DVDís we have two DVDís one in the bedroom and one at the mid TV and the one at the outside TV. For the sat Recís we use RF remotes so we can control the outside TV from the Mid TV sat rec.Sorry for the long reply but this is the easiest way I have found to do it there are many ways and you kind of wind up with a kluge and you wind up pissing your next door buddy off when you change your channels and his change also.

Yeah, it's a bit lengthy, but thanks for your efforts. I will be studying the post in detail.

I've ran HDMI from the middle TV to the front storage compartment and its a piece of cake. You'll have to open the door to the cabinets, then remove the panel on the bottom right of the inside compartment. You can then drill a hole through the bottom into the storage bay underneath. Once underneath you can run the HDMI cable to the front storage compartment. For running it to the back TV, I've tried to figure out a route and can follow the existing cables through the bunk, but loose it coming up the inside wall to the TV. Sure it possible, but it doesn't look like a lot of fun.

The setup I have:

In order to get the satellite on all three TV, I use the 211 from dish receiver. It has red, white and yellow out as well as HDMI. The red, yellow and white feed my back TV. The HDMI feeds an HDMI switch I have. Accepts 4 inputs in and 2 out. That way I can watch satellite inside or out or satellite inside and cable inside. Below is a list of some of the parts I've referenced above:

While not a cheap solution, it may be easier to use an HDMI over COAX balun such as the ones shown here. This will allow an HDMI signal to be sent over the existing COAX so no new cables have to be run. Not sure if you've considered this route or not. Obviously running HDMI would be slightly better, but this would be 100x easier.

While not a cheap solution, it may be easier to use an HDMI over COAX balun such as the ones shown here. This will allow an HDMI signal to be sent over the existing COAX so no new cables have to be run. Not sure if you've considered this route or not. Obviously running HDMI would be slightly better, but this would be 100x easier.

john1345 mentioned it earlier in his post when he said "Now (Option) is to do the HDMI converter thing and use the existing cable in the coach (RG6)...", however as they say a picture is worth a thousand words.

These baluns [bślən n.] are not very mainstream, typically used to extend signals over long distances. A popular one is HDMI over cat5/6 which allows you to extend an HDMI signal to over 300ft. The higher quality ones allow for IR (Infrared) signal extension as well, so that your IR remote can extend its signal over the same line, allowing the source to be located a long way away and still controlling it with the remote.

Assuming the source from your SAT is HDMI, you could also do a Blueray player, iPad, or any other HD source and use an HDMI switcher which will allow you to split the signals and send to any TV. If you get a 4x4 HDMI matrix splitter you can have 4 sources and 4 TVs and choose any source on any TV.

BooWho, we have 360ql and the tv is in the slide out. The thing Mike mentioned is what I was talking about they make it in coax output/input and SD cables.But, didn't think they we that much $.

Yes, that is more than I want to spend....... I find it reprehensible that FR opted to use composite (red/white/yellow) cables to the bedroom TV.... Even back in 2010 and earlier HDMI was coming on strong and component (red/green/blue for video and red/white for audio) was VERY common.

Basically, for me without stringing new cables to the BR TV, it's either COAX or the really old red/white/yellow.

I went back and forth on this and eventually settled on wireless HDMI from Actiontec. I bought a kit from Amazon (transmitter and receiver) and 2 more receivers. I use the transmitter with main TV for source (Satellite/Blue Ray) and receivers at the other TVs. Only drawback is you have to watch the same thing on all TVs.

I use the Next Generation remote control extender for remotes. It turns any IR remote in RF by replacing a battery with a transmitter. Very slick